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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | File system of Memory card I have a 1 G SD card. Can someone advise me how do I know its file system, i.e., FAT16, FAT32 or NTFS. Thanks, Scott |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: File system of Memory card Not sure, but a good thing to try would be to right-click its icon in your Computer folder and choose Properties. It works for most drive types. I haven't tried it with an SD card. "Scott" <NoSpam-Scott.Xe@GMail.com> wrote in message news:eUCnEFzxHHA.4300@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... >I have a 1 G SD card. Can someone advise me how do I know its file system, >i.e., FAT16, FAT32 or NTFS. > > Thanks, > > Scott |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: File system of Memory card On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 06:41:16 +0800, Scott wrote: > I have a 1 G SD card. Can someone advise me how do I know its file system, > i.e., FAT16, FAT32 or NTFS. > > Thanks, > > Scott You can be pretty sure is fat16. Cards over 2gb are generally fat32; those 2gb and under are fat16. Unless someone has reformatted it otherwise. A Linux mount can tell you what type it is. |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: File system of Memory card Puppy, Thanks for your advice. Does FAT mean FAT16? I tested a 128 MB memory stick that shows FAT in File System. Scott "Puppy Breath" <noreply@nospam.com> wrote in message news:B33A4712-8224-4FF0-B880-CCB1554BAB12@microsoft.com... > Not sure, but a good thing to try would be to right-click its icon in your > Computer folder and choose Properties. It works for most drive types. I > haven't tried it with an SD card. > > > "Scott" <NoSpam-Scott.Xe@GMail.com> wrote in message > news:eUCnEFzxHHA.4300@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... >>I have a 1 G SD card. Can someone advise me how do I know its file >>system, i.e., FAT16, FAT32 or NTFS. >> >> Thanks, >> >> Scott > |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| | Re: File system of Memory card Ray, Thanks for your information. I tested a 2 GB USB flash drive that shows FAT32 and believe it is borderline case and can be FAT 16 or 32. Scott "ray" <ray@zianet.com> wrote in message news an.2007.07.16.03.28.12.341551@zianet.com...> On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 06:41:16 +0800, Scott wrote: > >> I have a 1 G SD card. Can someone advise me how do I know its file >> system, >> i.e., FAT16, FAT32 or NTFS. >> >> Thanks, >> >> Scott > > You can be pretty sure is fat16. Cards over 2gb are generally fat32; those > 2gb and under are fat16. Unless someone has reformatted it otherwise. A > Linux mount can tell you what type it is. > |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| | Re: File system of Memory card Scott wrote: > Puppy, > > Thanks for your advice. Does FAT mean FAT16? Yes. Alun Harford |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| | Re: File system of Memory card Alun, Thanks! Scott "Alun Harford" <devnull@alunharford.co.uk> 在郵件 news:ufVvqO4xHHA.1168@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl ä¸*撰寫... > Scott wrote: >> Puppy, >> >> Thanks for your advice. Does FAT mean FAT16? > > Yes. > > Alun Harford |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| | Re: File system of Memory card Scott wrote: > Puppy, > > Thanks for your advice. Does FAT mean FAT16? I tested a 128 MB > memory stick that shows FAT in File System. Back in the days before FAT32, FAT16 was the only kind of FAT there was (except for FAT12, which was used only for diskettes and tiny hard drive partitions). So, not needing the "16" to distinguish it from FAT32, it was normally just called "FAT." Tody, some people still use the word "FAT" to mean FAT16, but I think that usage is poor and can potentially lead to confusion. In reality, "FAT" means any kind of FAT-- FAT12, FAT16, and FAT32--and if you mean any of those in particular it's best to add the number to make which you mean clear. But any time you see "FAT" and "FAT32" used in the same sentence, you can be pretty sure that, by "FAT," the writer means "FAT16." -- Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User Please reply to the newsgroup |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| | Re: File system of Memory card On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 13:39:06 +0800, Scott wrote: > Ray, > > Thanks for your information. I tested a 2 GB USB flash drive that shows > FAT32 and believe it is borderline case and can be FAT 16 or 32. As I understand, the 'borderline case' is 4gb - this is usually formatted as fat32, but, I believe, the fat16 spec leaves the possibility to support 4gb. There is no reason a smaller card cannot be fat32 - but generally they are fat16 as older digital cameras support fat16 but not necessarily fat32. > > Scott > > "ray" <ray@zianet.com> wrote in message > news an.2007.07.16.03.28.12.341551@zianet.com...>> On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 06:41:16 +0800, Scott wrote: >> >>> I have a 1 G SD card. Can someone advise me how do I know its file >>> system, >>> i.e., FAT16, FAT32 or NTFS. >>> >>> Thanks, >>> >>> Scott >> >> You can be pretty sure is fat16. Cards over 2gb are generally fat32; those >> 2gb and under are fat16. Unless someone has reformatted it otherwise. A >> Linux mount can tell you what type it is. >> |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| | Re: File system of Memory card Note that some laptop card readers cannot read SD's over 1 GB ..... |
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